Acute occlusion of stented coronary vessels still occurs in up to 3%. Activated platelets have been found to play a major role in the pathogenesis of these complications. We therefore analyzed the efficacy of a heparin coating of coronary stents and investigated the ex vivo efficacy of different antiplatelet drugs. Each of seven healthy volunteers was treated with each of the following medications for 7 days: ASA 100 mg/day, ASA 300 mg/day, ticlopidine 250 mg/day, and ticlopidine 500 mg/day. Three standardized in vitro silicon tubing models, one of them containing an uncoated stent, one a heparin-coated stent, and one without a stent (control) were filled with PRP and circulation was started. TOS in systems with heparin-coated stents was 2.4-times longer compared to systems with uncoated stents (P<0.001), and 1.5-times longer compared to the control (P<0.01). The increase of CD62p expression within the first 5 min was 2.5-times higher in systems with uncoated stents and 1.7-times higher in the control than in systems with heparin-coated stents (P<0.05). Aggregometry revealed significant medication- and dose-dependent inhibition of platelet aggregability for all medications. Heparin-coating of coronary stents reduces their thrombogenicity significantly. ASA and ticlopidine effectively reduce platelet activation ex vivo. The used in vitro system facilitates a reproducible method to estimate the thrombogenicity of coronary stents prior to in vivo trials.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/0953710021000057802DOI Listing

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